Whitley Strieber, Describes Bizarre Encounter With Mystery Man

Is there more than one physical universe? Why is Earth's climate
changing so suddenly? At what point will intelligent machines pose a
threat to the men and women who invent them, not to mention the rest of
humanity?

Many forward-thinking writers have pondered these questions. But none has approached them quite like Whitley Strieber,
who says many of his ideas were formed after a mysterious stranger
visited him in a hotel room in the middle of the night in 1998.

Strieber is the internationally best-selling author of numerous books that have been made into feature films, including 1987's New York Times No. 1 non-fiction bestseller "Communion" (his account of a close encounter with what he calls intelligent non-humans), "The Wolfen" and "The Hunger."WATCH WHITLEY STRIEBER:

In the early morning of June 6, 1998, Strieber was asleep in his room at
the Delta Chelsea Hotel in Toronto when there was a knock at the door.

"I got up to open the door, thinking it was the room service waiter.
It was not. It was a man I described as about 5 and a half feet tall,
older-looking, like someone in his 70s. He wore dark-colored clothing, a
turtleneck and charcoal slacks," Strieber told The Huffington Post.
Strieber's unannounced visitor stayed nearly an hour and never sat down or walked around -- he stood, motionless, by the window.

As the stranger spoke, Strieber took notes, eventually privately publishing the first edition of his book, "The Key," two years later, in 2000.

Strieber's visitor spoke about science and ethics, and when the
author asked about machines, the stranger replied: "An intelligent
machine will always seek to redesign itself to become more intelligent,
for it quickly sees that its intelligence is its means of survival.

"At some point, it will become intelligent enough to notice that it
is not self-aware. If you create a machine as intelligent as yourselves,
it will end by being more intelligent."

(Image, left: Arnold Schwarzenegger poses with a prop from his 2003 movie "Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines.")

Both Strieber and his visitor agreed this was a potentially dangerous
scenario. In a new edition of "The Key" (Tarcher/Penguin), Strieber
cites the June 2010 issue of Scientific American,
which discussed self-aware robots (like those depicted in the
"Terminator" movies): "Once a machine can understand its own existence
and construction, it should be able to design an improvement for
itself," the article suggested.

According to Strieber's account, the stranger -- whom the author has
since called the "Master of the Key" -- spoke continuously about topics
ranging from science to human potential and psychology.
It was, Strieber says, "the most extraordinary conversation I have ever had in my life."

Certainly, skeptics could have a field day with someone like
Strieber; the author first offered readers an account -- "Communion" --
of being abducted in upstate New York by non-human beings in 1985.
But Strieber also has a reputation as a well-respected, rational
individual who spends considerable time and effort investigating the
things he writes about.

"For more than two decades, I have been interacting with Whitley
Strieber and found him to be one of the most intelligent and thoughtful
researchers in the field," said John B. Alexander, Ph.D.,
former Green Beret commander, developer of weapons at Los Alamos, N.M.,
and author of numerous books, including "UFOs: Myths, Conspiracies and
Realities" (Thomas Dunne Books).

"There is no doubt he has had some very strange experiences -- ones
that even he does not claim to fully understand," Alexander told HuffPost. "While some details may be in question, we certainly agree that the universe is far more complex than anyone has imagined."

Strieber's curiosity about the things told to him by his mystery Toronto visitor led him to investigate further.

"The statements he made were so interesting that I researched some of
them in detail, in particular, what he said about how ice ages happen.
As I looked into the scientific literature, to my surprise, I found
various papers that added up to exactly what he had described in quite a
bit of detail. In those days, the information hadn't been drawn
together before the way he put it together."

Strieber's visitor had suggested: "Human activity has sped up the
process of atmospheric warming, so the change will be sooner and
stronger. The greater part of human industry and culture, along with the
species' most educated populations, will be destroyed in a single
season."

That information given to Strieber by the mystery man formed the
basis of a book co-written in 2000 with legendary radio talk show
personality Art Bell, "The Coming Global Superstorm," which evolved into the 2004 apocalyptic film "The Day After Tomorrow."

The concept of multiple universes was also a topic of conversation that night in 1998.
"There are more galaxies in your universe than there are stars in
your galaxy, and more universes in the firmament than there are galaxies
in your universe," the stranger told Strieber. "There will come a day
when mankind will learn how to detect universes beyond. But most are so
far away that their light has not yet reached your universe, since the
day of its inception."

Heady stuff to be sure, but there are growing beliefs in the existence of more than one physical universe.
"In the realm of far out ideas in science, the notion of a multiverse
is one of the stranger ones," noted the space and astronomy news
website Universe Today, in January. "Astronomers and physicists have considered the possibility that our universe may be one of many."

At one point, Strieber asked his strange intruder an offbeat question.
"I asked him what sin was, and he said what I think turned out to be
one of the most extraordinary things in the whole book. He said, 'Sin is
denial of the right to thrive.'

"I've always been interested in definitions, because in the Bible,
the Ten Commandments are there but there's no real clear definition of
what sin is, in a fundamental sense -- how we can use the words to
evaluate our lives as we go along: Am I doing something that is
ethically good? Am I being worthwhile in my life at this moment?"

Strieber's encounter with his visitor ended after 45 minutes.

"I wanted more information about him, and at that point, he said,
'Would you drink this.' He was holding a glass in his hand and it had
something in it that looked like milk, and without questioning it, I
drank it immediately and it put me to sleep right away."

Strieber has never fully concluded who or what his 1998 visitor was.
As hard as he tried to find the unusual man, Strieber never saw him
again after that night.

"It's possible that this was no ordinary human being. I asked him his
identity in many different ways, and he was pretty coy and very amused
by my attempts to find out who he was during the course of the
conversation.

"I think the encounter has given me a window into the future in the
sense that the science he described is true. And I think, therefore,
that the science he described that hasn't been discovered yet is
probably true, too."

Whitley
Strieber was abducted from his cabin in upstate New York on the evening
of December 26, 1985 by non-human beings. He wrote about this
experience and related experiences in Communion (1987), his first non-fiction book. Although the book is perceived generally as an account of alien abduction,
Strieber draws no conclusions about the identity of alleged abductors.
He refers to the beings as "the visitors," a name chosen to be as
neutral as possible to entertain the possibility that they are not extraterrestrials and may instead exist in his mind.

He was extensively tested for Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
and other brain abnormalities at his own request, but his brain was
found to be functioning normally. The results of these tests were
reported in his book Transformation.